- Oxaloacetate decarboxylase from Pseudomonas stutzeri: purification and characterization.
Oxaloacetate decarboxylase from Pseudomonas stutzeri: purification and characterization.
Oxaloacetate decarboxylase (OXAD), the enzyme that catalyzes the decarboxylation of oxaloacetate to pyruvic acid and carbon dioxide, was purified 245-fold to homogeneity from Pseudomonas stutzeri. The three-step purification procedure comprised anion-exchange chromatography, metal-chelate affinity chromatography, and biomimetic-dye affinity chromatography. Estimates of molecular mass from sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and native high-performance gel-filtration liquid chromatography were, respectively, 63 and 64 kDa, suggesting a monomeric protein. OXAD required for maximum activity divalent metal cations such as Mn2+ and Mg2+ but not monovalent cations. The enzyme is not inhibited by avidin, but is competitively inhibited by adenosine 5'-diphosphate, acetic acid, phosphoenolpyruvate, malic acid, and oxalic acid. Initial velocity, product inhibition, and dead-end inhibition studies suggested a rapid-equilibrium ordered kinetic mechanism with Mn2+ being added to the enzyme first followed by oxaloacetate, and carbon dioxide is released first followed by pyruvate. Inhibition data as well as pH-dependence profiles and kinetic parameters are reported and discussed in terms of the mechanism operating for oxaloacetate decarboxylation.